Contain Data Leakage by Raising Your Security IQ

Headlines about compromised enterprises seem to be a weekly occurrence lately, if not daily. Whether data leakage incidents are driven by the likes of botnets, malware, viruses, etc., or non-malicious insiders, organizations’ bottom line and reputations are being severely affected.

From published internal emails to entire customer lists, intellectual property theft is often the result of a simple security program oversight. This webinar has been designed to help companies better comprehend the scope of data leakage and IP theft and, more importantly, how you can glean better security intelligence by:

· Considering the focus areas your company needs to encompass in your security program, from devices to education

· Understanding what use cases to look for and which Primary Data Sources to gather and monitor to gain the most visibility into the security and threats both internal and external

· Reviewing best practices for handling SIEM events and reducing Mean Time to Resolution (MTTR) for any detected breaches

As organizations scale, growing in size across physical and virtual borders, they rely on intelligent security operations to maintain the integrity of their security posture. Critical to building Intelligent Security Operations is the ability to gain visibility across boundaries, which means insight into not just networks and IT, but also operational data and IoT devices. This kind of visibility requires managing and maintaining the integrity of millions of events per second that are required to provide credible insights powering the Intelligent Security Operations.

But visibility without context can become a distraction to resource constrained security operations’ intent on focusing on what matters and remediating threats. Providing context to the collected data through real-time correlation and analytics generated alerts helps to prioritize security analyst tasks, optimizing resources and saving time. Machine learning enrichment of data through the addition of user, entity and security context, helps security operations teams to run efficiently.

These capabilities together empower you to track alerts and investigate threats at the speed of the attacker.

Learn how ArcSight plans to lay the foundation for intelligent security operations by providing an open architecture to leverage your data for better detection, investigation and response to threats, while maintaining integrity.

SIEMs have been around for years and many companies are wondering if they actually got a return on their investment. Meanwhile, multiple vendors are claiming that their latest tool can do everything that a SIEM can and more! Can the SIEM survive?

We believe that the SIEM is not dead. SIEM is evolving. It must be remembered though that a SIEM is a living, breathing creature that must be cared, fed and interacted with in order to thrive. SIEMs have gotten more robust and can be used to interact with other security programs in ways that they couldn’t a few years ago. Companies need to utilize the SIEM as their central pane of glass to see the threats to their environment and use integration with other tools to help ensure the security of their electronic data.

On average, the 58 United States companies participating in the 2015 Cost of Cyber Crime study lost $15 million due to cyber crime, an increase of 19 percent from $12.7 million in last year's study. And other countries are close behind. These are results from the recently completed Ponemon Institute 2015 Cost of Cyber Crime study. You know the risks, but you need the data to plan your defenses and demonstrate the cost of inaction.

For a fuller look at these and other findings from the institute’s study, join Dr. Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of the Ponemon Institute, to learn:

-What cyber crimes are most common and most costly
-The hidden internal and external costs you incur
-What security defenses are most effective in reducing losses
-How businesses with a strong security posture drive down costs

Cyber Crime cost US companies an average of $15 million in 2015 – a significant increase from a year earlier. It’s a troubling trend unearthed by the Ponemon Institute’s 2015 Cost of Cyber Crime study. You know the risks, but you need the data to plan your defenses and demonstrate the cost of inaction. In this Webinar Dr. Larry Ponemon and

-What cyber crimes are most common and most costly
-The hidden internal and external costs you incur
-What security defenses are most effective in reducing losses
-How businesses with a strong security posture drive down costs

Analytics, as they pertain to the security space, are a new horizon for most. With the universal rise in interest in applying analytics to security data and use cases many organizations are overwhelmed by the difficulties surrounding those technologies. Whether it is the cost and rarity of expert manpower, scale and speed of the data, or the immaturity of many of the technologies; many organizations need help making sense of this new frontier and how and where to apply it to their data sets. HPE Security ArcSight has taken the lead in making this emerging technology more readily consumable through the targeted use of analytics for particular datasets and use cases. In this vein HPE Security ArcSight has launched two security analytics offerings: User Behavior Analytics, and DNS Malware Analytics. Please join us in this webcast to learn more about these technologies and how they are making big impacts for security organizations of all sizes.

Security maturity models can take a variety of forms; they can be embedded on-premises or delivered as a managed third-party service. As such modeling has advanced over the past decade, the need for improved detection and mitigation of attacks has extended well beyond large businesses. A burgeoning underground populated by sophisticated data thieves, state-sponsored hacking collectives, and ideologically motivated hacktivists, is engaged in the systematic plundering and disruption of IT operations at companies of all sizes. This webcast will outline the drivers behind this imperative, summarize the robust approaches security vendors are adopting, and lay out a roadmap for shoring up the security postures of organizations, whatever their size.

The old school of cyber defense emphasized securing infrastructure and restricting data flows, but data needs to run freely to power our organizations. The new school of cyber defense calls for security that is agile and intelligent. It emphasizes protecting the interactions between our users, our applications, and our data.

The world has changed, and we must change the way we secure it. Join Frank Mong, VP & General Manager of Security Solutions, and hear why you need to secure your: Cloud services, data (wherever it is), and apps (wherever they run).

The idea of a "hunt team" is becoming quite popular. Everyone building a hunt team wants the best and fastest data stores, visualization engines, and pre-canned data science algorithms to magically (and very quickly) find needles in haystacks. But let’s be honest, we can’t afford to get exactly what we want. And if we could afford it, what we exactly want doesn’t even exist for us to buy at this time. In this talk, we'll look at how you can use visualizations and basic statistics with your existing tools to catch more bad guys.

The ever-increasing amount of logging output that IT organizations need to retain to have an accurate picture of what happened in their systems-and when-is a classic "big data" problem. Data categorization and normalization are imperative when sifting through a mass of data that can exceed a petabyte, while eliminating false negatives can aid a forensic investigation. This webcast focuses on HP ArcSight Logger 6, featuring a review of the product by SANS senior analyst Dave Shackleford.

Sign up for this webcast and be among the first to receive an advance copy of a SANS whitepaper discussing Dave's review of HP ArcSight Logger 6.

In the world of information security, the past isn’t dead; it isn’t even the past. The 2015 edition of HP’s annual security-research analysis reveals a threat landscape still populated by old problems and known issues, even as the pace of new developments quickens. In 2014, well-known attacks and misconfigurations existed side-by-side with mobile and connected devices (the “Internet of Things”) that remained largely unsecured. As the global economy continues its recovery, enterprises continued to find inexpensive access to capital; unfortunately, network attackers did as well, some of whom launched remarkably determined and formidable attacks over the course of the year.

The 2015 edition of the HP Cyber Risk Report, drawn from innovative work by HP Security Research (HPSR), examines the nature of currently active vulnerabilities, how adversaries take advantage of them, and how defenders can prepare for what lies ahead. Jewel Timpe, HPSR’s senior manager of threat research, describes the report’s findings and explains how this intelligence can be used to better allocate security funds and personnel resources for enterprises looking toward tomorrow.

Deploying and managing security information and event management systems can tax the brain and budget. However, if done right, these solutions can be a huge benefit to the overall security stance of an organization, providing insight into what's happening on the entire network and enabling security teams to focus on the most pressing priorities to make sure their organizations' infrastructures are safe and sound from attacks. We explore the many challenges organizations face when deploying SIEM and offer remedies that can optimize their use.

Many organizations are looking at using big data to detect more advanced adversaries. We are collecting more information than ever before, but what are we doing with it? In this talk, we will look at some ways you can use data science and visualization tools to get more out of the data you collect. Visualizations will let you see what is happening at a high level: A picture is worth a thousand log entries. There are data science techniques that other industries, such as advertising, have used successfully. We can apply these techniques to find patterns of behavior that are out of the ordinary, and ultimately catch more bad guys.

Businesses are spending so much money on security -- almost $47 billion in 2013 -- and yet the number of breaches continues to increase. To mitigate the risks of increasingly sophisticated, innovative and persistent threats, we need to change the way we think about our security programs. In this webcast, Art Gilliland, General Manager of HP Enterprise Security Products, talks about the challenges all enterprises face from the bad guys -- and the critical steps businesses must take to defend against today's most advanced threats.

The recent data breach cost Target more than $60 million in recovery costs. And even that has been exceeded at other companies that have fallen victim to advanced targeted cyber attacks.

View the webinar to learn:
•How to present a hard target to hackers
•How advanced persistent attacks work
•How the SOC and NOC can work together
•Best practices for security information and event management (SIEM)

To combat advanced adversaries, we must improve our detection and response capabilities. This presentation will cover emerging processes and technologies in security operations that allow organizations of all sizes to improve their detection and response effectiveness. The capabilities presented here have been used by HP to detect and remove advanced threats for organizations across the globe.

Compliance and security are better together and there are tools and resources that can be combined to achieve both. Learn the top 10 tips - such as continuous monitoring, assessing the controls, and cost-effective audit logs - to understand and implement best practices of compliance and security together.

The average company in the United States loses $12.7 million annually to cyber crime. Other countries are close behind. These are results from the recently completed Ponemon Institute 2014 Cost of Cyber Crime study. You know the risks, but you need the data to plan your defenses and demonstrate the cost of inaction.

View this webinar with Dr. Larry Ponemon to get the information you need. You’ll learn:

- What cyber crimes are most common and most costly
- The hidden internal and external costs you incur
- What security defenses are most effective in reducing losses
- How businesses with a strong security posture drive down costs.

The cost of cyber crime is on the rise in the APJ region, according to the 2014 Cost of Cyber Crime study from the Ponemon Institute. Among 30 companies surveyed in Australia, the reported per-company cost for Internet-driven crime was $4 million, up 8.4% from 2013. In Japan, the per-company average hit $6.9 million in the study, up 5.7% from 2013.

On the more optimistic side, companies in the region are achieving notable ROI for their investments in cyber security solutions. The average ROI for seven security technologies was 16% in Australia and 17% in Japan. For a close-up view of these and other findings from the institute’s research in Australia and Japan, join Dr. Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of the Ponemon Institute, for our APJ Security webinar.

Protect your business with security analytics and compliance solutions

Your organization, regardless of its size, must turn security and log data into actionable intelligence to make smarter, more efficient decisions. This channel features presentations that help answer your security questions. For example, you can learn how to manage business risk, monitor your IT infrastructure and automate compliance. Take your security knowledge a step forward with best practices in the latest security trends like Big Data Security Analytics, combating Advanced Persistent Threats and understanding the costs of cyber crime.